Friday, February 11, 2011

Rare Stuff On Poptropica

"The anti-white racism: a social issue we face"

Bondyblog.fr

Tarik Yildiz, 25, graduated from Sciences-Po Paris and PhD in political sociology, author of a book on this sensitive issue that "people should be able to discuss neighborhood."

You wrote a book entitled "The anti-white racism. Do not talk about: a denial of reality . Can you explain what made you want to approach this subject?

I worked for the site Earth Future , published jointly by the agglomeration of municipalities of Seine-Saint-Denis Plaine Commune and the BondyBlog . In this context, I had many spontaneous testimonies which alerted me to this problem. I wrote a few articles have mentioned. Then I realized it was a subject that deserves a broader treatment. Therefore, I decided to compile them and offer them to publishers. One of them contacted me even though he was embarrassed by the title at first.

Exactly, why distinguish between "anti-white racism" as you do it of racism at large?

To understand this, we must put on the side of victims of racism. They used this expression many times. Do not put it that way would have been a betrayal. While this is controversial I think the phrase is justified. This is not a hierarchy but to describe reality. It is a fact that calls for future analysis.

Are you sure that what is described in this book is completely a reflection of reality?

I myself have witnessed this type of problem in my neighborhood when I was younger in my college for example. A classmate, named Christopher, was being harassed, insulted, hit and everyone in class was linked to its origin. The various testimonies of the book show the same thing regardless of group membership of the various protagonists.

Being white is to risk being a Bolosse as they say in the suburbs?

Bolosse expression is at the crossroads of what I am saying: at once an attack against an ethnicity and social class assumed. Guillaume Bastien, Fatma or Celine (some of those interviewed in the book, ie) show that it is increasingly a reality in the suburbs, so much so that some French invent a mixed origin. This intolerance focuses on ethnic supposed first among younger, college, because the effect of group plays at full speed for this type of racism. It was in college that the overall situation seems more difficult. Then it fades globally in older age groups, however, without disappearing as shown Bastien and his mother. This group effect against "ethnic French" is more problematic in college than high school et au lycée plus que dans la vie adulte.

Tu utilises des expressions comme « Français de souche », or tu ne ressembles pas à l’image stéréotypée de la France ?

(Rires) Mes parents viennent de Turquie, mais je suis français et j’ai grandi en banlieue. Je pense que ces questions ont souvent été laissées à des sites marginaux. Je crois que c’est un tort et qu’il s’agit d’un vrai sujet de banlieue et un sujet de société que nous devons affronter.

(...)

Mais tout de même, pour ceux qui vont lire ton opuscule, il y a des passages récurrents sur la religion musulmane. Hassan se dit Muslim, but he has problems because he eats during Ramadan or buy alcohol, etc ...

Exactly, it's a very good example of what I am saying. Racism anti-white forces everyone to conform to a standard far more repressive and that the origin of those who face. Had there been a real social mix in neighborhoods, Hassan did not feel that pressure. The real difference is that before the suburb was a place of mixture. There are areas where the paste takes over. Law Group predominates over that of living together. People in these neighborhoods leave these areas, leaving those remaining more in the inter-se. The challenge is that this is not only Zemmour Finkelkraut or who can talk about it. People districts must be able to discuss it. It is also a battle of words. I'm talking about anti-white racism because I do not want to leave this term to groups that I do not share the ideology.

But your book seems to be a burden: thou hast found almost no evidence that criticizes your thesis. There were no people in these neighborhoods to oppose the notion of anti-white racism?

If one understands racism as perceived membership in a group, then I think it is in France as in other cases of racism. I'm talking about racism is a reality. These are people who are largely came to tell me their feelings with their own words. My study does not claim to representativeness of the scientific field. I just wanted to tell and show what some residents of these neighborhoods are feeling through spontaneous testimonials.

(...)

Tarik Yildiz, "The anti-white racism. Do not talk about: a denial of reality "The Well Roulle Publishing.

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